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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 15

Location:
Detroit, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

City to Ticket SPORTS FINANCE Pjettxrit 0m tm ties north and Detroit, was established four years ago at a cost of almost $1,000,000. Investigators found that it took only 32 seconds for a passenger train to reach a street crossing after the signal flasher started to operate, Mitte said. "This does not give the motorist sufficient warning to avoid accidents," Mitte 'Forgotten Man 1 1 Months; but for 30 Days He's King As Santa Claus He Rules Supreme Over Thousands of Children's Hearts SAVE General Motors Chorus to Rehearse for Concert The 400 members of the General Motors Chorus, all employees of the automobile makers, will meet Monday to rehearse for the concert with Mme. Lotte Lehmann. Erno Rapee and a large symphony orchestra next Sunday night in the Masonic Temple Auditorium.

Ed-uard Ossko is conductor of the chorus. The rehearsal will be held in the General Motors Building auditorium. 105th Year. No. 226 Speed Trains Crews to Be Haled to Traffic Court Monday, December 16, 1935 Free Press Want Ads Bring Best Results $25 to $50 1 Enroll noKt Start Imam inrr htitdiyi.

ff.nefi Snanuh Enliih. any tthrr Unql aft. Fix Trial Itisen. Firemen to Waltz for Goodfellows Detroit firemen will frolic at dances in Fire Headquarters Monday and Tuesday evenings, the proceeds of which will go to the Old Newsboys' Goodfellow Fund. Dancing will be in the auditorium at Wayne and Lamed and music will be donated by the Detroit Federation of Musicians.

Mike Falk and his Casa Mira orchestra will play Monday night, and Tuesday night Benny Kyte and his VVXYZ orchestra will accompany the dancers. Many acts of vaudeville will be donated by the Detroit Artists Bureau. The parties are being given under the supervision of Bernard J. Ryan, president of the Detroit Fire Fighters Association, and head of the Relations Counsel of the Fire NE John UEItLITZ merous accidents by excessive spend," Mitte said. "The railroad has refused to comply with the regulations.

We will issue tickets hereafter to their train crews just as we do to automobile drivers." A test case on the question was considered probable by H. V. Spike, general counsel for the railroad, who stated, in an opinion, that the authority rested not with the Police Department, but with the Michigan Public Utilities Commission. Bowker has said that the railroad would contest the ordinance in court. Mitte added that the question has been turned over to the Traffic Survey Bureau, with orders to time the trains with stop-watches, serve train crews with tickets in cases of excessive speed, and bring them to court for trial.

Bowker reported that the railroad had slowed its trains to 15 miles an hour for one day, and that so many complaints by passengers resulted that the company decided it could not run its trains so slowly. The suburban service, shuttling more than 700 passengers daily between Oakland County communi Ing homa lldren in Lions Smother Giants, 26 to 7, for Pro Gridiron Crown Wings Take First Place Alone by Beating Rangers in Final Minute Fine Line Play I School of Lanquaoet jfi fii. win tinsel For from Muskegon Supervisors Study Relief Problem MUSKEGON. Dec. 15 (A.

I The Board of Supervisors will Suicides Parallel Business Trend CHICAGO, Dec. 15 (A.P.) The decline in the number of suicides has paralleled improved business since 1933. Prof. William Fielding Ogburn said today in tracing the course of suicides and commercial failures over a twenty-year span. The University of Chicago sociologist drew a curve of yearly suicide rates from 1915 to 1935 and another recording business failures.

Pointing out that one might be mistaken for a carbon copy of the other, Dr. Ogburn asserted that "such similarity is rarely found in statistical series." Urn Ti larger departn: Giand Trunk Railway train crews will be served traffic-violation tickets if they exceed the fifteen-mile-an-hour speed limit within the City, it was announced Sunday bv Traffic Director Edward A. Mitte. The announcement wa3 Mitte's answer to a recent statement by C. fj, Bowker, vice president and general manager of the railroad, contesting the right of the City to control the trains.

Mr. Bowker said that suburban-commuter service on the line would be discontinued if the company was forced to observe the speed limit. "Those trains have caused nu Sets Stage for The Camera Catches a Split-Second Thrill 1 with little tykes whose hands are I dirty "it's only fair to the others," he explains -and has learned i fathers and "mothers regarding what they can afford to give. "Every parent thinks his or her I child is the only one in the world." fays. "And they 'stick forgetting there are others who He ets Present, Too It's hard work, too.

shaking hands all day, talking every minute, chucking children under the chin, and handing out the little book which is a free gift of the store. Sometimes it is his turn to receive presents, when enthusiastic fathers proffer a cigar or children eager to please offer him a bite of their chocolate or hold out a bag of peanuts. Regan says he looks forward to Nov. 25, when his job as Santa Claus begins, though he takes what stage work there is at hand the rest of the year. He has been an actor since he was two years old.

Once he had his own stock com- meet Monday, to wrestle with the. prcolem of direct relief for uncm-ployables. The State had asked the Couniy to appropriate for the period ending Sept. 30, but George F. Liddle, chairman of the finance committee, said such an appropriation was Impossible.

Others have predicted that. $80,000 would be sufficient. TRUNKS and BAGGAGE LIGHT MOVING DAY and NIGHT All the news briefly and concisely at a time when you can read it in the Free Press, Detroit's only morning newspaper. PHONE CHERRY 1004 i s. The Second Guess Lions Finally Reach Their Goal Grid Stars Follow Tigers' Example A Lesson in Character Building By W.

W. Edgar i beard wrapped in tissue paper. One moment he is on the street, one of the teaming millions, obscure, unprepossessing, 61. an ae-tor bv profession. The next he is striding into the vast emporium with a buovant step and a lift to bis heart, to play the role of his life.

Welcomed by Old Employee Even before the whiskers are on fell chin and the shiny boots on his feet, he is receiving the greetings of old employees. The trans WatrousinTie for Third with 141 at Miami Horton Smith Leads, Followed by Young Ohio Golfer Blazing Shot byMacDonald Decides Game Aurie Adds 'Another In Wild Finish of 4-2 Victory By Doc Hoist i sy Great Victory Defense Smashes Up New York Vaunted Pass Attack By Tod Rockwell The Detroit Lions won the championship ot the National Professional Football League Sunday, defeating the New York Giants, 26 to 7, at the Titan Stadium. Approximately 12,000 spectators braved sleet and rain to watch tho Lion line pave the way to a convincing triumph on a slippery formation is qui itttti ONSIDER what has taken place right here before rm On I his wl when he takes off nd calls It a year, to his wife for his whiskered, he Dom. and shoutlnf ildren by thf to the booth i sits, shake garbed, pacineo ana enters the throne 1 Then the tumult begin. From 9 to 6, el thousands step up where Santa Clau hands, whisper in at.

his whiskers, la The Ked vvings grauueu unuia- session of first place in puted Ml it National Hockey League at the last nignt Dy a ipectae jfr last minute, 4 to 2, victory L.r the New York Rangers. "Christmas is quite a day with The Regans have no children. Six Michigan Students Given Awards by Yah NEW HAVEN, Dec. 15 (A. The award for the current year of scholarship and beneficiary aid totaling $319,053 to 713 undergraduates was announced Saturday by Yale University.

Recipients from Michigan arc Charles B. Bayly, of Charlevoix; our eyes during the past six months and you'll know what I mean," he went on. "The Tigers got away to a bad start, didn't they? But wallowing around in the second division during the early weeks of the campaign didn't bother them. They kept their chins up and fought back-fought their way from a poor beginning to their first world championship. "That took spirit and courage.

It required ideal leadership and the old fight, that we try to teach the boys in school. The Tigers offered a great example to any fellow who thought the 'breaks' were loo much to overcome." The old coach, who preferred to remain anonymous to spare himself any further jibes regarding his character building, peered down at the last member of the Lions going through the gate. was Bucko MacDonald, burly ithful defenseman, who i donned the hero's robe by deliver- the second goal of his major career -just 57 seconds be-ore the close of the final period. It broke a 2 to 2 tie. then Iiarry Auric, who had nnerited with younR MacDonald ona beautiful piece of akatlng to Leak tie, kept up the cheers of the 8,000 shrieking spectators hy I makinsf a fourth goal Just three aecondl before the game ended.

gu( it Was the second goal that THE final whistle had Just blown and the Detroit Lions, an army of mud-bespattered warriors, raced for the clubhouse the champions of the professional world. They had just conquered the defending titleholders, the New York Giants, 26 to 7, and were being proclaimed one of the outstanding teams in all football. As they wended their way to the showers to rid themselves of the muck and slime gathered during the sixty-minute struggle, a gray hait ed college coach looked down at them and chuckled in the rain. "There goes a great football team," he remarked. "One of the best I ever saw.

It has the power and deception coupled with speed, to make it a well co-ordinated machine But more than that, it has spirit -the old rah rah stuff that is so evident In the college game." The rain didn't seem to bother the old coach as he stood there, shouting the praises of the new champions. Truly, he was amazed at the way the Lions performed under the most treacherous conditions one could imagine. "For years I have been known as a character builder in the college football," he chuckled, "and I have stood for many a taunt. But, boy, if sport In Detroit, this year hasn't been a lesson in character building, then I don't know what the building of character is all about. CORAL GABLES.

Dec. 15 (A.P.) With Horton Smith, tall, blond professional from Oak Park, 111., showing the way at 139 for the first 3ti holes, 62 top-flight golf professional and amateurs paraded today into the last two rounds of the $10,000 Miami-Biltmore Open. So fierce was the competition that the money players needed scores of 149 or better to qualify for the concluding 36 holes of the sport's richest tournament. Smith's 36-hole total, three better than par for the distance, served definite notice to the field, that included almost every famed golfer in this Country that he was back on the game that brought him fame and riches five years ago, L'nknowns Shine Only recently returned to major competition, the modest twenty-seven-year-old Missourian joined today's round of 70, one under perfect figures, to yesterday's 69 to lead the field. As in previous years, comparative unknowns were well up among the leaders after the first two rounds of the sixth annual tournament.

One stroke back of Smith, at 140, was John Milutic, of Youngs-town, who fastened together Kdt up to 14. She Earns a Kiss One little girl sat in his lap and wfiispered: "I don't believe in Santa Claus, but I like to come nd sec vou." He gave her a kiss. The work has made Regan a philosopher. He likes to "size up" the parents, will not shake hands Richard W. Bryant, of Grand Rapids; Frederick W.

Hyde, ol Marquette; Frank E. Warneken, of Grossc Pointe, Dwight D. Det Bloomfleld, of Jackson, and John i A. Gllray, of Birmingham. Bucko pv broke the ERE is another example of what I mean," he went Today's Crossword Puzzle BEAUTIFUL CRYSTAL PERFUME line liilRfttTUtl AMERICAN GENTLEMAN SHAVING SET maoe in nis nie inai i acks of Lester Patrick's if Manhattan and sent ings galloping into the with 17 points, rks Help Catise ie game started the ic Chicago Blackhawks led Wings were In a for the lead with 16 ic fast stepping New ans Jiot only aided the to gain first place by ii lilackhawks but their 1 them within one i place In the Inter-i mi.

the first time have found themselves I a perch. Wings' victory Sunday sed 10 days of spec-In which they played winning five of them hi nther. Three of the me mi the road. The BOTTLES two sub-par 70 for his two under par total. Tied for third place were three players, two of them comparative unknowns Al Watrous, veteran i Detroit professional, whose 69 to-' day came within one of tying the day's best score; twenty-five-year-; old red-haired Bruce Coltart, of I Woodcreft, N.

who says that he has been playing golf for money i since he was about 15, and Al Nel on. "A few weeks after the pro football season started, the Lions, who had made such a great showing last year losing the title by just two games-were being battered around the league. "They had been looked upon as a leading contender for the title when the race opened. But they couldn't untrack themselves in those early games. How many did they lose four wasn't It? "Well, four losses in a league like this Is enough to blight anybody's dream of a championship.

But what happened? "The Lions stuck to their task. They took the breaks with smile and began fighting back. When they played the Green Bay Packers here several weeks ago, they had their hacks to the They had been beaten by the Packers and another loss would eliminate them. 98c In by McKesson 89c Wfimmm Exquisite designs with mi OWski. 1 HawksTripped by Americans Score 3-0 Victory in Anniversary Tilt mm IP for Christma 12 I is jfc 1 7 I 18 73 f.4 35 53 T4 J-JL1L i i ii i A gifts to the wo umrr: i man who likes the strong the Hang and th Contains McKesson's Shaving Cream, Lotion, Talc and Hairtona Quinine Scalp Tonic.

Handsomely boned. 3dainty things, id lc had when begun to COTY iiind this kind UT they beat the Packers "B1 son, of Hopewell. N. all had 111. Mel, races Scoring A spulrge of low scoring, led hy Dick Metz, Chicago pro, who breezed around the course in 68, three under par, put the qualifying figure so low that many noted golfers found themselves outside looking in.

Among them were Abe Espinosa, of Chicago; Leo Diegel, of Philadelphia; Alvin Kreuger, of Beloit, Wis, and Craig Wood, of New York. Qualifiers at 142 were Metz, Frank Walsh, of Chicago, and Byron Nelson, of Ridgeway, N. J. Tommy Armour, Henry Picard, Denny Shute, and Bobby Cruick-shank, victor in the Sarasota Open last week, were grouped from 143 to 145, and Paul Runyan, Johnny Revolta and Johnny Farrell were included in the group scoring 146. and that was the turning PINAUD'S LILAC PINAUD'S MEN'S SET PERFUME wo touch-dlty In tho ither while third, an.l mini with quarter; iants sec Christcnsen breaks up a pass to Singer, Uiants end, tn the second period ot the Lions championship victory NEW YORK.

Dec. 15--(A. The New York Americans cele-! brated the tenth anniversary of the birth of professional hockey in New York by shutting out the Chicago Blackhawks, 3 to 0, in a National League game in Madison Square Garden tonight. The Americans opened the game with a startling display of speed I and aggressiveness that threw the Hawks back on their heels. Only two minutes and 36 seconds of the opening chapter had gone by when Dave Schriner broke away and Whipped one in.

Eleven minutes later, Joe Jerwa raced into a swarm of men and then nt inf i Beckers Down Tall, graceful crystal flacon In smart lame gift box. L'Aimant, L'Origan, Paris or Emeraude. Very specially priced. 295 IN GIFT BOX Lilac Vegetal, Lilac Shaving Cream and Talcum. 2 10 HI 11.

1, BOXED AS A GIFT avor'e after have lotion every man will wel- iJr come as a gift. W- the final si more touchc ing the gai to be other Caddel. I started the Detroit wht klckoff to Book Review A Diamond Veteran Awards Old Iffy the Prize point. The sun began to shine through the clouds of doubt for them, if you don't mind me gi tting a little oratorical. "Then the Bears came along and the Lions, riding on the wave of new spirit, turned them hack.

That was the tip-off. i live them a chance at the title and watch them go. "And now here they are champions of the world shai-ing rank with the Tigers when no one gave them much of a chance little more than a month ago." The rain beat down on the old coach. But he didn't mind. He never does when he sees an object lesson in charncter build- the potentially outfit of the lit started.

They 1 and followed 'tory over the later. They cans 1 to 1 and to begin their ssault that car-ace. They beat ursday, 3 to 1, walloped the into 4 to 2. kept up their rivals to play lit by grabbing grabbed the goal in 6:48 icotty Bowman Less than a rea, alone, gave lead. It had to i the Rangers, and they made ling game of it Hani Luck score will only fans had more II Sure to please! Horizontal 1 Room in a harem 4 Lose brightness 8- Stupid or silly person 12 Light touch 13 Mountain goat 14 Entice 15 Pharmacist 17 American Indian 18 Bristle 19 Ate according to rule 21 English author 23 Corded fabric 26 Wrath 29 Dutch city Hockey rath than buck, a here O.

B. Keeler, most famous sportswriter of the South, veteran sportt; editor of the Atlanta Journal, used his sport column the other day to review the Iffy Book of Tiger Tales. He says of it: Fintex Eleven Challenge Cup Match Is Postponed For the second successive week poor weather conditions caused thei postponement of Sunday's scheduled match between Chryrler Highland Park and the Ramblers soccer sticks near the Chicago cage' and jabbed, the puck in between the feet Of Goalie Kara- kas while the like through NATIONAL LEAGUE AMEBIC DIVISION Side pieces of ban Notable period SHADDO end. earth I. iF PH.

A 111 tier's view I i he went right I Detroit chimed rUanri lid-inn DUSTING POWDER Ii iked FFY is a classical game in his ifferings baseball fan ot the type. He sees the rnival mood. Ami illustrated by the INTERNATION VI. iiivisiov (ilp ttt id this 40- 12 Small hois 44 Foray I. i win -I" it 98' Mirrored box with leatherette top and huge silk tassel.

of Mr. Floyd S. Nixon, genius Mintuk Toronto VllH'ricni i rood I nmidlrll I way that afternoon, Jack iants in a vay. Thev good and spirit that of 'Never hat didr watched linnv Johnson, had the daze most of the made the backs loo it was their fighting did it that spirit Say concerned the teams ame back rag-ni? in thr third I 'i-fll mHnivwni. d.mi, btn.

PERFUME WBw outht r.f.$7llkSP Dainty pune-tiie fkfk EJtfM Wl Wk Wl fn marvelous dfr fyZ ELMO I KIT Geh.a. U.th.f ca. Idiistihg powder fSf 3-Piece Gift Sei fi- IN PEARLOID BOX I WL Face povvder' rouae Ik fM sssss i oo ''Di CUTEX Mps Kkn- $200 MANICURE WJ I ffp- 1 TRAVEL FT I cue and foi hands on et -chargim vY ll KD 1 Kt.M I I Det roll Tefsmte Hungers Ii. Miirnmm SI NDAX'fl II1M I I Drtrnlt I. RnnE'r Ilodlnn i I.

American 9. Chlruao 0. TUESDAY'S 1 Detroit nt Boston. KOHjIit-ns nt Kinnrers, Toronto nt Montreal. Burke was ca PALMOLIVE Men's GIFT SET ball to chan yard line by By this tin in the game, tensen was punting and tured bet wee Amet kf 0PEN 4 JAM EVENINGS I ood Hampers, and many small ations.

Second-Bethune jP Kercheval-Cadleui furious slugging match Bill Brydge, of the and Marty Burke, of the resentative in the National Challenge Cup tourney. The game will he played next week at the same place. Secretary Charles Leech, of the Michigan Soccer Commission, declared that there will be positively no postponement again except In event of floods, earthquakes, or similar natural phenomena. The inclement weather failed to halt two Greater Detroit League games at Solvay Field. In the Da in addition he Inter- fpted iwskl icr that was dis-two shota that ito the net were 1 a Detroit play-bhie line ahead shot was Referee Newsy Scotty Bow-k trying to an-ler with their ho had made a the end of the Butch Keeling Charlie Mason, itiiod desperate.

us were plaving If they had a 52 Crescent-shaped fi B3 Preceding nights 54 flowed 50 Supports for furnit 56 Father of Enos and 57 Bend in timber Vertical 1 Probabilities 2 Defy 3 Border on 4 Kind of fruit 5 Dwell 6 Wish 7 Reaches 8 Floating ice sheet 9 Get a better shot i 10 Mountain comb. 1 11 Shelter lb Aeriform fluids 20 Seesaw 98' toiletries in neat clasp box for "his" Christmas, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE WESTERN DIVISION It Ii Li to the CHICAGO KuriiknK Coulter Illllk. Romiira UoVniljni Thompson -Dattani Hwnr Klein. Hawks. NEW YORK Worters Ilndx Jcrwa Chiiimnn AMMraon Srlirlner New ork Ntm mi.

i otton, mun, Kiiiiuh. (Iiiiago huare M-lic. Tmili'll. La Delrnit emetine' I Windsor 1 rittshursti first, Ekhatdt and Beck by the tee unpHINK of what this means J- to Detroit," he continued. "What an object in character building not only to the youth, hut the grownups.

Here are two teams right in our own back yard who wouldn't quit, even in the darkest hours." The old coach hestltated a moment. Then he concluded, "And because they wouldn't quit these Lions and Tigers, they rule the roost in the two major professional sports of the Country." And as he finally left the stadium, the old coach who has been preaching character building to his athletes for, lo, these many years was mumbling something, the only line of which I could catch went: "Only the game fish swim upstream." squirm He rev blocke, raced Mttraki But ink, llnrlli'lt He did; found daylight, and He cut back. as the Lions the clear and ichdown after dash. Dutch iod Danowski Kerens, king. I.

I OT Pl. 43 30 7 1 ii tu i 4 1 an ii 4 HO 30 4a 8 EASTERN DIVISION UP (JA Pti. ft I I 47 17 7 ii 3i ij ii 5 6 3 37 38 J3 3 8 0 3.1 ri now MEM Lit Ii. rlltshurch 1. I 3 PIECE VANITY SET COMB BRUSH MIRROB Hi-ilir.

aii I IK-T racnse l.oniton Rafale Rochester i mi. i. Iirlner. I. ok of the veteran Bill Clark, shut Fintex, 4 to 0.

Clark scored goals, thereby becoming the se player to turn the hat trick ir weeks. Last week Walter Ro scored three times for Ge; United. After a slow start Cheviole countered little difficulty in di ing Northwestern, 4 to 1, in Jirv uaer Man Little Airman DHrnlt marvelous eet Men's GIFT SET Itta three-piece Dental cream, HHKliEBnlWl peck. Ideal for the trev- Lvti9d i7czzrz $ooo (., cream, 0 7 IfT CUTEX KIT IN freshener LXt1 soap and talc. ----IIIV I fl W-V BAKELITE CASE.

8c nesnener. Aar CSStilSSSi H0Ubigant I Cloisonne like baclcs on brush and mirror. Choice of colors. -OUsrer, -Ii OKD I i linn' ThomnHnn, AiKirmnil, rkc illicit rhiuoii Iran, Olbrr (Mfwarti, Wfibe, Wlnrnimi. Rnrkp linil- thi let eland (1.

nurMlo S. SI M) 'i RIM I.T Sjrai'Uio? 7. Clrtelnnd 4. TI MM1 mm Detroit rtt London. Pltlabi nt Windsor.

I levelnnd it Rochester. his the ayinR ioked "The Rare Old College Spirit" involving Hughie Jennings and his erstwhile Cornell huddie. Umpire Billy Evans. This one narrative is worth a hundred times the price of admission, and the subsequent selections may be fairly estimated from some of their titles. "ARE BALL PLAYERS PEOPLE?" is one story.

"Gas-House Baseball," "The Miracle Man Business," "Dear Old Golden Days," "Homers and Homer Hank" that's Hank Greenberg. of the current (but not raspberry) crop; "The Mental Attitude." "To a Snarly Old Anon" beginning: "Sir, your handwriting is as mean as your thoughts and neither is at all clear" I'd like to tag some other good old Anons like that; "A Locker Room Lecture," "Geh-ringer at the Bat." "Reflections on Bonehead Plays" with a generally unknown sequel in the pathetic finish of Fred Merkle's career, after the tragic mistake in that famous game in 1908, enabling the Cub to tie with the Giants on the season, and beat them for the pennant in the play-off. "OLD-TIMERS' FANNING BEE" a pippin! "Drama on the Baselines." dating away bak to King Kelley, known more than thirty years ago as the "Ten-Thousand Dollar Beauty." "Tales of the Baseball Wars." and "Professor Iffy on Pitching." a lecture any fan may read with immense profit; inside stuff turned outside and made fascinating all along to "Donovan of the Fighting of the heroic episodes of baseball. IT'S A GRAND collection, these Tiger Tales not all about the Tigers, either. The book is printed by Stair Jordan Cerre, of Detroit, and the price, two-bits, is a literal crime of under-valuation.

You ought to have a look at it! other half of the double bill. John (Butch) Lenard accounted for two of the Chevrolet goals. Kxplnsion i fans beg for years have charmed the baseball populace of a city that has played well its part in the game Detroit, home of the Tigers, winners of the 1935 pennant in the American League, and, after a span of more than a quarter of a century, conquerors of the Chicago Cubs, who had beaten them twice, the world series of 1907 and 1908, in the days of Ty Cobb and Wild Bill Donovan and Hughie Jennings. With rare taste there has been collected an assortment of Iffy's contributions to the Detroit Free Press in an "Iffy's Book of Tiger Tales," illustrated, of course, by Mr. Nixon, all selected from the sports pages of the paper.

And I think no more spirited or brilliant assembly of baseball classics exists or is likely ever to exist. THE TIGER TALES are redolent of the locker room and the bench at the ball park, with horse liniment, tobacco, honest sweat and highly flavored conversation predominating. The spirit of the game and its players is over all, and you may get a lot of the low-down on Ty Cobb, whom Iffy calls the greatest ball player of them all; and Nap Lajoie. and Wild Bill Donovan whose pitching arm had to he massaged until 3 o'clock in thi morning, before the last game of the 1908 season, when it was Detroit or the White Sox for the pennant and Wild Bill unable to sleep even then, slipped out to spend the rest of the night in a low hangout of that era, turned up smiling for breakfast and shut out the desperate Sox with five hits that afternoon. A HUNDRED tales of franetic action mingled with episodes behind the scenes, prefaced by one of the classics of American sport PARK LANE COMPACT in tr mother tie Kerr, Ranger Goalie, Falls to Ice Just in Time to Prevent Score rds one he caught it.

U-executed touchdow I'arkir (ines ir-at mi of It Assunn A rsar Kef use Petit point or cloisonne effect topi. Day-light mirror on bottom. 59c 46-47- 1H 1 hig show that eft to tie. TI Scottie Sachet grabbed the Ifh the Rangers' efensemen with ting along at his clip. A second nsnrr In Vcstcrda's iff "Evening In Paris'" YARDLEY MEN'S SET Shavina bowl.

lo. "Evening In Paris" TALCUM POWDER and FACE POWDER AND PERFUME yard Olant White chine Scot-tie end stand 1o hold cigarettes after sachet is used. tion and talc, $J)g5 49c Wm tau de Cologne Gift Set GIFT SET BY BOURJOIS icvnreg wiTn cng- llsh lavender. PAT NAM El A Appropriate for either men or QC viomen. Handsomely hoxeri i tavontes.

beautifully 1 tt 'Kill it. K. II n. I bo led for Christmas giving. i i mi a I i mm WM oMl PERFUME GEM SHAVER'S SET EVENING IN PARIS" AM) ATOMIZER I Patrick II Hrvdmni i Hun I link Miirrtix Ii Krelinc Mi i Dillon Rill Cook noil lldir IZER 79c A dainty with handy atomiser.

An aviator's cap can make a youngster very happy and also keep his small head warm. In Santa's Treasure Chest" Mother or Dad will find such an airman's cap. 4-Piece Gift Set BY BOURJOIS $00 Evening In Paris" ST STAR Perfume VWGIFT SET $10 For "His" Gift 98c Gtm Razor, 2 blades, bakelira bowl of shaving soap and Order your Iffy Book for Christmas. An ideal present for the youngsters and for basebell lovers everywhere. Only a limited number of these now historic books remain and they should be a part of every sportsman's collection.

On sale at the Free Press or by mail. 25 cent. YARDLEY I Stomach Ulcers Due to Gattric per acidity Thof ntio ftulTrr ttum -fnmarh ulrrr. nrrvHii inriijtrhtion, gstrl1l. arid, fitt prr Hurf oiir.

nick Nniiach, hetrhlnic, I hrnrthurn, i mMfpntiftn, tytr- iifikii i lm of Hfiprtitr it br caitrlr hfiM4 itiitj. linnl(j nut th-. i.iirfl him Sivr up bop1, hut Ui 0. a MctrnltfW trt-Mtiuf-nl, tit-lfi fem to hfMtfh nri happi- i Mi's. Urilr Uks fir Ml' Shaving Bowl I 3 Strohs Finish Second Mexico Beats Texas Lather, $aj00 i -t I TALCUM, FACE POWDER.

PERFUME AND ROUGE, IN CHRISTMAS BOX. II Mr I.I I MIM)I K'S BODY.

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